THE EARLY EARLY LATE SHOW 2015

The Court Theatre, Bernard Street, Addington, Christchurch

08/07/2015 - 18/07/2015

Production Details



The Early Early Late Show returns as part of KidsFest 

Christchurch’s favourite Court Jesters bring all the chaos and fun of the late night improvised comedy show Scared Scriptless to the family-friendly time of 6:30pm as part of KidsFest 2015. 

Songs, scenes and games will all be made up on-the-spot by the cleverest, funniest, silliest comedians we could find. The audience will be called on to give them a suggestion and they’ll turn it into comedy!

What Now hosts Ronnie Taulafo, Chris Kirk and Bianca Seinafo will be making guest appearances on selected nights. Before joining What Now, Biancawas last seen at The Court performing in Goldilocks and The Three Bears and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

The players are all excited to perform but no one is quite sure what is meant to happen. Each Jester will be given a set of instructions from ‘The Boss’ but no one’s instructions are the same! Luckily these capable comedians work best when they’re panicking, so the audience will be in for a treat as the Jesters scramble to make things work.

Suitable for ages 8+.

“All the fun of Scriptless without the rude bits.” Theatreview

On the Tonkin and Taylor main stage at
The Court Theatre
08 – 18 July 2015

  • 6:30pm: Wed 8; Thu 9; Fri 10; Sat 11 July 2015
  • 6.30pm: Wed 15; Thu 16; Fri 17; Sat 18 July 2015
  • What Now Guest Appearances: Ronnie on Fri 10 July; Bianca on Wed 15 July; Chris on Fri 17 July

Running time: 1 hour 10 minutes

All Tickets at the special family-friendly price of $12 each
from The Court Theatre website or 963 0870.


Cast: Kathleen Burns, Brendon Bennetts, Rhiannon McCall, Hamish Oliver, Ben Ashby.

Crew: Director: Dan Bain; Stage Manager: Lydia Foate


Theatre , Improv ,


A warming, enriching experience

Review by Grant Hindin Miller 09th Jul 2015

When children run out to play in an open space the first thing they do is set boundaries: a bag for one end of the goal, a coat for the other; that line of trees will be the sideline and ‘if you kick the ball over the fence you’re out’. Scriptless theatre works in the same way.

We have an open space, the stage (and on this occasion the charming set for The Cat in the Hat); we have the players, and fresh young players they are (Kathleen Burns, Rhiannon McCall, Ben Ashby, Brendon Bennetts, and musical director, Hamish Oliver); now we need some boundaries.

Structure is imposed by an omnipotent ‘Boss’ who is heard but not seen. He issues instructions to follow; they are headlined on the wall and each player has a folded sheet that contains more specific guidelines: “You will perform a sketch in which one player is sitting at all times, one is standing, and one is lying. The players can change position but someone always has to be sitting, someone to be standing, and someone to be lying.”

The Early Early Late Show is called a Comedy for the Whole Family and it lives up to its name.

There’s a good wallop of audience interaction. On my night one young girl, Isabella, a thespian in the making, becomes a unicorn and has an experience she’ll remember all her life. The show has a sound frame which combines interactive and individual elements, allowing for each member of the cast to shine.

The troupe is like a family: they work well together; they are mutually supportive and maintain a positive co-operative energy. As in most groupings, a natural leader emerges and that is the talented Kathleen Burns, an alpha personality who is never short of a word or gesture when required.

Sketch themes include ‘hype’, ‘true love’, and ‘House Party’. One subject, ‘People’s Voice’, uses a collection of one-liners penned by audience members before the show. These lines are scattered on the stage for players to use at critical times in a makeshift ‘story’ whose genre is determined by the audience.

It’s an animated form of the old parlour game ‘Consequences’ and holds tremendous potential for creative players: how to link and cross-link seemingly random messages and make sense of the nonsensical (a metaphor for life). I could imagine an entire improvisational show based on this technique. The cast does well, bearing in mind that they are receiving these messages at the same time as the audience, and it takes courage and skill to draw significance from them. I enjoy this sketch and would love to see it go further (which is not to detract from what the performers do and I acknowledge they have some fine moments in the sketch). 

Improvisation is a demanding art and to be ‘on’ in fresh scenarios for seventy minutes is a significant creative challenge. The cast comes to the party, everyone adds to the overall effect and they are ably supported by the humble Hamish Oliver on keyboards who is excellent – creating mood and atmosphere without drawing undue attention to himself or his art.

Would I recommend the The Early Early Late Show? I certainly would. I didn’t want to go out in the cold. My window-wipers squidged on their speediest mode as the car cut through snow-grit on the icy roads to the theatre. But though it was one of the coldest nights of the winter I felt warm and enriched going home.

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